cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Community Tip - Stay updated on what is happening on the PTC Community by subscribing to PTC Community Announcements. X

Mirroring Parts in an Assembly

ptc-4371591
1-Newbie

Mirroring Parts in an Assembly

I am trying to put an assembly that is symmetric about a plane, and would like to be able to just mirror parts to not have to repeat all the same constrains on both sides, how can that be done? Also is there such a option for component placement as width or symmetric like in Solidworks?

http://help.solidworks.com/2011/English/solidworks/sldworks/legacyhelp/sldworks/assem_1/Width_Mates.htm

http://help.solidworks.com/2012/English/SolidWorks/sldworks/Symmetry_Mate.htm

Thanks


This thread is inactive and closed by the PTC Community Management Team. If you would like to provide a reply and re-open this thread, please notify the moderator and reference the thread. You may also use "Start a topic" button to ask a new question. Please be sure to include what version of the PTC product you are using so another community member knowledgeable about your version may be able to assist.
13 REPLIES 13

In create component there is mirror option in subtype,enter the name of the part and various mirror options will be available.

Dale_Rosema
23-Emerald III
(To:gkrishna)

Be very careful with "symmetrical" parts. If you update the origianl part, Pro/Creo doesn't always update the mirrored part ( or update it correctly). Also, if you need to make changes down the road that make the part unsymmetrical you will have issues at that time. Thanks, Dale

thanks for that , i always assumed associativity will be maintained in mirrored parts too.

or pro/e never asks if it want it to be dependent or independent to referenced part.

Creo does not have a symmetrical constraint (silly, I know). From what I understand they are working on this type of functionality. It is not too difficult to work around it with relations, however. Just place the 1st part at a distance; do the same with the second part and edit the relations of the second dimension to be the same as the 1st.

I'm with Dale on the mirroring effort. It might seem simple for the moment for in the long run, it could be difficult to manage.

If this -is- something you can do without too much worry, you can assemble one side of your assembly and save the entire assembly as a mirrored version (FILE>SAVE-AS>Save a Mirrored Assembly). The you can assembly the mirrored assembly into the 1st.

Dale_Rosema
23-Emerald III
(To:TomD.inPDX)

From a drawing standpoint, I have frequently had the drawing state that RH (right hand) or LH shown and that the other hand is symmetrically opposite with out have to model it fully.

vzak
6-Contributor
(To:ptc-4371591)

Ideal case for mirroring is when you create all parts left-handed i.e. when there is no Reuse case. Then you have two options :

- "placement dependent" will make mirrors fully dependent on originals i.e. B_MIR placement depends on B_ORIG, and not on A_MIR. No real constraints will be created inside mirrored subassembly.

- "placement independent" will try to re create similar constraints in mirrored subassembly based on constraints in original subassembly. Means B_MIR will be constrained to A_MIR, and will no longer depand on placement of B_ORIG.

make your considerations which associativity you choose.

However if you have a "Reuse" case to reflect symmetry parts - this is not ideally supported (yet) as noted abowe. For "Reused" components it is recommended to Redefine them later in context of mirrored subassembly.

TomD.inPDX
17-Peridot
(To:vzak)

Vladimir, could you post this with examples and screenshots of the dialog of which you speak?

This is a fairly common question where a targeted tutorial would be helpful in the community.

Things make a lot more sense with pictures (we're geometric after all )

vzak
6-Contributor
(To:TomD.inPDX)

Ok, will add some snaps later the week. Can I edit existing post or need to add a new one ?

TomD.inPDX
17-Peridot
(To:vzak)

Feel free to add new ones.

vzak
6-Contributor
(To:ptc-4371591)

Ok, here it comes with the pictures. The goal : mirror subassembly so that components create respective constraints inside mirrored assembly, and depend one on another - not on their originals placement.

1. Start point. We will mirror RIGHT_HANDED.ASM about TOP_ASSEMBLY datum plane. PLUG.PRT is constrained to COVER.PRT and our goal is that PLUG_MIR.PRT is similarly constrained to COVER_MIR.PRT.

5-15-2013 5-17-20 PM.png

2. This and the next slide constitute "independent placement" for PLUG_MIR.PRT which means it will try to re create constraints. Pre requisite for this : all placement references of plug.prt should reside inside RIGHT_HANDED.ASM (and not use higher level assemblies references). here it works - PLUG.PRT has references to COVER.PRT only.

5-15-2013 5-19-20 PM.png

3.

5-15-2013 5-23-56 PM.png

4. Here is a result : PLUG_MIR.PRT has 4 constraints. All to COVER_MIR.PRT.

it will not move if PLUG.PRT moves, but only if COVER_MIR.PRT moves.

5-15-2013 5-25-21 PM.png

5. This is how PLUG_MIR.PRT redefinition looks - hope like what you desire.

5-15-2013 5-43-04 PM.png

6. IF it was mirrored as "Dependent Placement" (Dependent means "dependent on source component position only") :

5-16-2013 12-36-22 AM.png

it will not move if COVER_MIR.PRT moves, but rather if PLUG.PRT moves.

7. Last note here: "Dependent Geometry" is about Mirror Merge dependency state - will it update by source model geometry change or not. Can go either combination with "Dependent Placement" option, they have no inter dependency.

TomD.inPDX
17-Peridot
(To:vzak)

Very nice! One question; how did you get to the mirror subassembly dialog in the scond step? I cannot seem to get to that dialog.

vzak
6-Contributor
(To:TomD.inPDX)

well, you should get it after Component Create / Subassembly / Mirror / OK

TomD.inPDX
17-Peridot
(To:vzak)

Oh, that helps

Top Tags